Monday, April 20, 2026

Debating Amazon Leo Objectives

Amazon’s objectives with Leo are debated. 


Is this a standalone telecom business or a strategic infrastructure layer feeding higher-margin businesses (likely AWS)?


The possible motives are complicated as Amazon often talks like a “margin hunter,”  but often acts like a scale builder that tolerates thin margins for a time. 


The trick is that Amazon usually tries to separate where value is created from where it is captured. 

Amazon repeatedly enters markets characterized by low margin and high margin, so “margin” is not the primary consideration.


The effort to find “moats” or bottlenecks where value is extracted, and sometimes a low-margin business can lead to a high-margin moat. 


Layer

Characteristic

Amazon Behavior

Customer-facing layer

Huge TAM, fragmented, price-sensitive

Compete aggressively, often low margin

Infrastructure / platform layer

High fixed cost, scalable, defensible

Invest heavily, aim for high margin long term

Data / control layer

Feedback loops, optimization

Build moats that others can’t replicate


The point is that Amazon doesn’t mind entering a low-margin market if it helps it own a high-margin layer underneath or adjacent to it.


Also, “high capital investment” can be a feature, not a bug:

  • High CapEx deters competitors

  • Once built, marginal costs drop sharply

  • Scale converts fixed costs into a profit flywheel

  • Infrastructure can support multiple businesses

  • Pricing power eventually comes, once dominance is achieved.


So huge capex commitments are consistent with Amazon’s playbook, if Amazon believes it can control a bottleneck layer.


“Is this a high-margin or low-margin business?” might not be the right question for Amazon leaders, who likely are asking:

  • Can we own a critical layer?

  • Does this scale globally?

  • Does it reinforce our existing flywheels?

  • Can we improve cost structure vs incumbents?

  • Is there a hidden high-margin component?


So the larger picture is often not the immediate or obvious business, but the ability to create leverage elsewhere. Consumer initiatives such as e-commerce; devices or streaming then can be viewed as demand aggregators and ecosystem lock-in creators that drive revenue indirectly (advertising, cross selling, subscriber lock in).


Enterprise infrastructure plays such as AWS or logistics might be better examples of direct, high margin initiatives.


The thing about Leo is where it fits. From one point of view, consumer telecom is a low-margin, highly-competitive business with high regulatory conditions, low innovation and low growth rates. 


So why even consider it?


Amazon probably envisions non-obvious leverage points:

  • Where Amazon captures high-margin compute, not connectivity

  • With different value drivers in consumer and business markets.


Owning a connectivity service could:

  • Reduce internal costs

  • Improve performance (latency, reliability)

  • Be bundled with Prime and devices to

  • Drive usage of AWS, the advertising platform and e-commerce

  • Support IoT connectivity (devices, logistics, smart home). 


Framed that way, Leo might be viewed as a platform layer supporting:

  • Edge cloud

  • AWS (compute plus connectivity)

  • Telcos as customers

  • Prime average revenue per user or account

  • Customer retention and acquisition


To be sure, execution will matter. But, in theory, Leo is not directly about high margin. It is about control of what is likely to be a low-margin feature of a higher-margin ecosystem. 


Amazon’s explicit framing is straightforward:

  • Create a global broadband access business

  • Serving “tens of millions of customers” globally

  • in “unserved and underserved” markets

  • Offers private connectivity directly into AWS

  • for enterprise, government, and telecom customers.


So AWS integration, enterprise and government use cases and private networks might be key, not “consumer telecom.”


Leo then is a connectivity extension of AWS. 


But there are clear risks and some skeptics. 


Optimistically, Leo extends AWS to the edge of the network. 


On the other hand, it is a near-term drag on earnings, in a business with tough economics and financial returns that could take some time to develop.


So it might matter hugely whether Leo can generate AWS pull-through; enterprise demand and other ecosystem upsides. 


Also, how long this takes could matter. 


Layer

Role

Margin Potential

Consumer broadband (Leo ISP)

Distribution / scale

Low

Enterprise connectivity

Premium services

Medium

AWS integration layer

Data + compute + control

High

Ecosystem effects (Prime, commerce, ads)

Indirect monetization

Very high


Sure, it’s risky. But some will point to past Amazon initiatives based on entry into low-margin businesses that provided moats:

  • Retail → low margin → enabled AWS scale

  • Devices → low margin → enabled ecosystem lock-in

  • Logistics → low margin → enabled marketplace dominance.


Leo arguably fits the pattern, optimists will argue. It’s about high-margin AWS, not low-margin telecom. Skeptics will worry about the execution risk. 


Sunday, April 19, 2026

Cardboard Boat Race, Golden, Colorado

What do geeks at Colorado School of Mines do for fun on an April weekend? Build boats out of cardboard and duct tape. 


Will they float? Will they capsize at the first rapid? Many do.


But some boats and teams do make it to the finish line without swamping, having their boats disintegrate or getting grounded and disqualified. 


The water level in Clear Creek is very low, so grounding was common. 


Great fun. 





Musical Creativity is Hard to Sustain, Apparently

As I was sitting in church recently, I wondered why the worship music I was hearing did not strike me as powerfully as some of the contemporary Christian worship music from the 1995 to 2015 period or thereabouts. 


Some might point to such examples such as::

  • Hillsong (Darlene Zschech's "Shout to the Lord," 1993, then the broader Hillsong output through the 2000s)

  • Chris Tomlin, Matt Redman, David Crowder — the "worship pastor as recording artist" era

  • Michael W. Smith, Paul Baloche, Tim Hughes


These songs, from that era, crossed denominational lines, being sung in Catholic parishes, black Baptist churches, and Anglican cathedrals alongside evangelical megachurches.


More recently, I admit I hear few newer compositions that seem to have that same resonance, and just wondered whether bursts of musical creation have happened before. 


Maybe the creative cycles are inevitable, though. You might note that some of your favorite musical groups or singers in general also are not equally commercially successful throughout their careers.


Some might argue the history of music is actually full of concentrated creative bursts followed by relative fallow periods:

The Viennese Classical Period (~1770–1800) Haydn, Mozart, and the early Beethoven produced a staggering concentration of the foundational classical repertoire in roughly 30 years. The generation immediately after struggled to define itself in that shadow. 

The Florentine Camerata and Early Opera (1590s–1640s) The invention of opera produced a creative explosion — Monteverdi, Peri, Caccini. Then a relative consolidation period before the Baroque opera seria fully matured.

Tin Pan Alley's Golden Era (~1920s–1950s) Gershwin, Porter, Rodgers & Hart, Berlin, Arlen — a concentrated burst of the "Great American Songbook." The late 1950s saw it run dry just before rock replaced it entirely.

The British Invasion / Classic Rock Peak (~1965–1975) An almost absurdly dense decade of canonical output. By the late 1970s, critics were already writing "rock is dead" pieces.

Bebop and Hard Bop Jazz (~1945–1965) Miles, Coltrane, Monk, Parker — followed by fusion, which many felt diluted rather than advanced the tradition.


Scholars of creativity point to a common structure:

  • A new platform or technology opens up (the printing press for Luther, the concert hall for Vienna, recording for Tin Pan Alley, the megachurch and Christian radio for the worship era)

  • A small, networked community of talented people cross-pollinate intensely

  • There's a genuine felt need the music meets — social, spiritual, political

  • Then institutionalization sets in, the pioneers age or scatter, and the field fills with imitators.


The worship music burst fits this template almost perfectly, some might argue. 


“Paradoxically, it was the success of Christian music that led to its failure,” says Derek Walker, writing for Christianity Today. “The industrialisation that managed people’s demands for Christian music ended up being the cause of its own demise.”


In the 90s, sales of Christian music albums exceeded those of classical, jazz and new age music. Supply could not keep up with demand. Record companies had to keep signing bands, just to keep the machinery of business going, feeding the playlists of Christian radio stations in the USA with new material. 


Lower quality was the result, he argues. The market was saturated with undistinguished material. Streaming might have fragmented the audience, while formats became clichéd, he says. 


That might be less directly true for liturgical music, rather than contemporary Christian music. But I still do not hear new compositions of great power.


Saturday, April 18, 2026

It's Just Math

It’s normal for commentators to note that any new tax plan “gives” more to the wealthy than to working people. So it is with the latest tax plan


Such claims normally rely on absolute dollar amounts of benefit, rather than the impact of rates, which normally are progressive, with higher rates for wealthier payers, and lower rates for lower-income earners. 


Most such differences are the result of mathematics. A small percent of a big number is a big number; a small percent of a small number is still a small number. 


In the United States, for example, the top 10 percent of filers pay roughly three-quarters of all federal income taxes. 


The bottom half of filers produce 10 percent to 15 percent of all federal income tax receipts, and some effectively pay zero rates when one adds in the effect of income transfers and credits. 


Income Group (AGI Percentile)

Approx. Share of Total Income

Approx. Share of Federal Income Taxes Paid

Avg. Effective Tax Rate

Top 1%

~20–22%

~40–45%

~25–27%

Top 5%

~35–38%

~60–65%

~22–25%

Top 10%

~45–48%

~70–75%

~20–23%

Top 25%

~65–70%

~85–90%

~17–20%

Top 50%

~85–90%

~95–97%

~15–18%

Bottom 50%

~10–15%

~2–5%

~3–5% (often near zero or negative)


If you broaden from income taxes to total federal taxes, including payroll taxes (Social Security, Medicare), the overall system remains progressive, if less so than looking strictly at income taxes. 


But the point is that any tax plan that reduces rates will “give much more to the rich” than to lower-income taxpayers, simply because “the rich” pay most of the taxes. Even a progressive rate reduction is not going to change that. 


So it might come as no surprise that most people are relatively indifferent to any tax savings they received. It’s just math.

Debating Amazon Leo Objectives

Amazon’s objectives with Leo are debated.  Is this a standalone telecom business or a strategic infrastructure layer feeding higher-margin...